"Why did my program crash with Swift fatal error: unexpectedly found nil while unwrapping an Optional value?" is one of the most frequently asked questions in the [Swift] tag.
In many cases the question can be closed as a duplicate to one of the many existing questions, including at least one that has some detailed troubleshooting steps in the answers.
In some cases though, it is merely that the wrong question has been asked. I came across two questions on this this morning.
The first I initially closed as a duplicate, but after reading the documentation for the framework involved for about a minute I was able to see what the asker was doing wrong, re-open their question and give an answer that solved their problem.
In the second case, the question had been closed as a dupe by another gold badge, but the underlying problem (a malformed URL) was easy to see. In this case I again re-opened and provided an answer.
While I understand all too well the frustration of seeing the same question again and again, it seems that by reflexively closing questions as duplicates as soon as we see "unexpectedly found nil" we are preventing (or at least making it more difficult) to for people to get the help they came here for.
Edit
@Keiwan said in a comment
I definitely agree that nobody should vote to close anything without actually reading it first (no matter how triggering the title is), but I also think that pretty much everybody would agree on this
But it seems this is not the case, the reflex triggering based on question title is happening.
I guess I am asking what, if anything, we can do about this? Perhaps nothing? Just reopen or flag for reopen? Look for a better dupe-target (one that addresses the root cause, not the error message)?
I am sure that there are similar classes of questions in other tags as well. This is the Swift equivalent of "null pointer exception" in C and can have numerous root causes; some of which are obvious duplicates, some of which are not.
Does unnecessary dupe-hammering happen with those or is this a Swift tag issue?
URL
initializer returnsnil
even though they are providing a seemingly valid string. The problem is that they didn't actually ask that so I think you can't for sure say that either you or the people trying to close the question are wrong.